Punctata (not the similar cornowiana). Dwarf species has quite large (for plant) cream to white flowers with long spur which is nicely coiled-up at bud stage. Unusual "silver-gray" foliage. Although more or less blooming size, these are tiny plants in 1" pots. Please make sure you know what you are ordering.

Large size warm-growing vining epiphyte from Western Africa. Very beautiful 3” long-lasting fragrant flowers are nice green with a curvy white lip suffused in the center with emerald. Very hard to find this plant in the market.

Unusual and interesting growth, with thin “terete” leaves, like Ang. scottianum. The white flowers, usually 2 to an inflorescence, have some pinkish in the sepals. Lucky to get the parent plant from Mr. Hillerman many years ago. These can bloom at a very small size. Picture shows approximate size of plant.

Two fine forms have been selected as parents. Fan-shaped growths lacking pseudobulbs produce single-flowered inflorescences from the leaf axils. Blooms are a very unusual and beautiful shade of dark pink. Contrasting bright yellow band across lip. This member of the Bollea/Pescatorea family is really great because its flowers display well (unlike some others in the family) Water year round.

(Rhyncholaelia digbyana) National flower of Honduras. Epiphyte with tough-looking foliage grows in good light. Single large amazing flowers are yellow-green with prominent fringed lip. Lemon scented at night. Famous species is not so common anymore. Very limited.

Very pretty, the large lip dominates in both form and color. Very limited. Lip is a cheerful lilac color with yellow veins and yellow center. Seven or eight flowers are grouped at the end of long spikes. It’s epiphytic habitat in very warm coastal areas indicates that it requires a good amount of light and probably should be mounted. By John Lindley and Joseph Paxton, drawing by L. A. L. Constans (Paxton's Flower Garden, volume 3, plate 105) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

Very pretty, the large lip dominates in both form and color. Very limited. Lip is a cheerful lilac color with yellow veins and yellow center. Seven or eight flowers are grouped at the end of long spikes. It’s epiphytic habitat in very warm coastal areas indicates that it requires a good amount of light and probably should be mounted. By John Lindley and Joseph Paxton, drawing by L. A. L. Constans (Paxton's Flower Garden, volume 3, plate 105) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

The mobile lip thrusts up tufts of long fine red hairs that wave and rock in the slightest breeze and give it the appearance of a living thing. "...one is really tempted to believe that there must be something of an animal nature infused into this most unplant-like production." (Lindley, 1837)

Lovely little plant, the pseudobulbs are only a little more than an inch tall. Large (for plant size) bizarre flowers are borne one per inflorescence. This is the “attractive color variation… that is a pale yellow throughout with light red spots.” (Siegerist, 2001) Photo courtesy Tomas Bajza

This is the true makoyanum. Small hot to warm-growing epiphyte has outrageous umbels with flowers held out in a horizontal plane. Yellow with red petals and dorsal sepals, which have hairs on their backs. The red areas form a fuzzy red ring at the center of the umbel. High class Bulbophyllum!

Miniature warm-growing epiphyte found growing on the bases of small trees and shrubs. Several flowers are borne singly on erect inflorescenses right above the foliage. Flowers are yellowish, heavily mottled with maroon. Lip is maroon and white.

Photo of ‘Red Chimney’ in our website gallery. China, India, Assam. Another less-common variety of the fantastically showy red-purple flowered B. roth. Different from ‘Red Chimney’ – perhaps fuller segments and slightly different colors. The species was found in a box of nearly dead orchids arriving in England in 1892, said to be found in the hills above Darjeeling. The plants were sent on to Lord Rothschild and flowered in 1895. (From the Orchid Review Dec. 1922 and featured in Bill Thom’s fascinating and entertaining book ‘Bulbophyllum – The Incomplete Guide; From A To Why?’)

Most people are familiar with the famous FCC clone ‘Red Chimney’. The distribution of this clone ‘Adoribil’ has been much more restricted. Very full umbels of up to eight large red flowers, each with very frilly fringed tops (of the dorsal sepals). For Bulbo fanatics. Division.

Dwarf epiphytic species is still in demand. Tough little plants produce terminal inflorescences with one or two large (for the plant size) waxy long-lasting flowers. Sepals and petals are greenish yellow, covered with maroon blotches. The showy lip is whitish around the column grading to beautiful amethyst. From rather dry areas near the coast. Good seedlings.